The Federal Government should honour its agreement with the Academic
Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) in order to end the ongoing strike
that has paralyzed academic activities in government-owned universities,
the All Progressives Congress (APC) has said.
The party’s Interim National Publicity Secretary, Alhaji Lai
Mohammed, said in a statement issued in Abuja on Tuesday that no
government can afford to play with education, because it is the path to
national
development.
development.
According to the party, ASUU was not making any fresh demands beyond
the agreement it reached with the government in 2009, adding:
“Agreements are meant to be honoured, and breaching them comes with some
consequences.”
APC said the industrial action by the university lecturers which has
kept students in public universities at home for many weeks is a further
blow to the country’s education system which has deteriorated so much
that no Nigerian university is currently listed in the top 100
universities in the world and only a few Nigerian universities have made
the top 100 in Africa.
“The 87 billion naira that ASUU is demanding represents earned
allowances hence cannot be renegotiated. In any case, this amount pales
into insignificance when placed side by side with the 1 trillion naira
that has been spent on federal legislators in the past 8 years; or the
frivolity involved in a government minister travelling to China to
negotiate a $1 billion loan in a chartered jet (with its attendant
costs) and with a retinue of staffers who earned generous estacode in
hard currency.
“It is an indication of the kind of priority that this Federal
Government attaches to education that while it has refused to meet its
own side of an agreement it reached with ASUU since 2009, it could pay
out 3 trillion naira in non-existent fuel subsidies to fat cats, spend
10 billion naira annually to maintain the jets in the presidential fleet
and do little or nothing to prevent the stealing of 400,000 barrels of
crude oil per day, which translates to $120 million in a month, money
that surely ends up in some people’s pockets!
“What we are saying is that if the Federal Government would reduce
its profligacy and cut waste, there will be enough money to pay teachers
in public universities, as well as fund research and upgrade
infrastructure in such institutions. Hungry teachers can neither teach
well nor carry out research. And poorly-taught students can neither
excel nor propel their nation to great
heights,” the statement said.
heights,” the statement said.
The party also registered its disgust at the demonstrated nonchalance
of those who should be working round the clock to resolve the crisis,
especially the Minister of State for Education Nyeson Wike, who the
party said has enough time on his hands “to be launching vigilance
groups and dancing ‘palongo’ around town when the nation’s public
universities are shut and students are languishing. This is shameful and
totally unacceptable.”
“We are not surprised because most government officials have sent
their children and wards to foreign universities, hence do not give a
damn if the children of others are in school or not.
“Education is the key to national development. This is why UNESCO has
recommended an allocation of at least 26% of national budgets to that
critical sector. Therefore, talking about national growth and
development without adequately funding education is a pipe dream!” APC
said.
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